Burbank (California), USA - Milan Entertainment has announced
the release of
Moro No Brasil, (aka "The Sound of Brazil") Finnish director Mika
Kaurismaki's 2500 mile journey to discover the amazing diversity of Brazilian
musical culture. Far beyond the familiar Samba and Bossa Nova, Kaurismaki's
travels uncover an astonishing diversity of musical styles including Frevo,
Maracatú, Coco, Embolada and Forro, meeting musicians, singers and dancers who
show the overwhelming force of music in the often difficult daily life of
Brazil. Kaurismaki's subjects run the gamut from the members of the little-known
Fulni-O Indian tribe to the heroically famous Seu Jorge, a samba singer from Rio
who has an international recording and acting career. Originally produced in
2002, the DVD and its accompanying soundtrack
CD were released for the first time this week.
Kaurismaki begins his journey at the roots of Brazilian music, in the
Northeast states of Pernambuco and Bahia. "My principal idea was to start
with the Indians, who were the first ones to sing and dance in Brazil, and show
how the music changed and developed when foreign cultures arrived, first
Portuguese and then African and to show where it is today," Kaurismaki says.
The film takes the viewer through several regions, styles and generations,
introducing Manca master Silverio Pessoa, Forro legend Jacinto Silva,
internationally-renowned Afro-Reggae-Sambist Margareth Menezes and
Seu
Jorge, the 36-year old singer and actor who turned a difficult upbringing in
a Rio favela into a samba with street attitude and social awareness and became
one of the most important names in Brazilian popular music.
Born in Orimattila, Finland in 1955, Mika Kaurismaki had made a name for himself
among European audiences by the mid 1980s with gangster films such as "Rosso"
and "Helsinki Napoli," which were known for their unique sense of irony. He
developed a reputation as an unconventional director with the thriller
"Condition Red" and the ecological adventure film "Amazonas." His collaboration
with Jim Jarmusch and Sam Fuller, "Tigrero" won him the International Film
Critics Prize in 1994. Since 1989, he has lived partially in Rio de Janeiro.
"When we hear about Brazil in the media is, unfortunately, mostly negative,
principally about violence and crime," Kaurismaki says. "But I have
encountered many beautiful things too. What impresses me the most is the joy of
life of the common people who suffer. Music plays a big role in the life of the
Brazilian people, it can often be seen as offering a way out and a means of
increasing self-esteem. Through their own music, I want to show the people of my
current home, their pursuit of joy, of 'alegria.'"
[Buy the DVD, Moro No Brasil and the CD: Moro No Brasil soundtrack CD].
World Music Central
http://www.worldmusiccentral.org/article.php/20060615073559635